Users report issues installing Apple's Mac OS X 10.7 Lion - Page 2

I had the same problem when I was installing the preview from WWDC. I had to boot in single user mode and run fsck -y to repair my disc. It was the only thing that worked for me... but once I did that it installed perfectly.

Both my Macs, one early 2009 24" iMac and the other a late 2009 13" MacBook Pro. In fact, the couple of problems 10.6.8 caused my iMac, are no longer. One had to do with Time Machine and the other sleep mode. Sure they hid the Library folder but if you want it back just go to terminal and type: chflags nohidden ~/Library or just press Go + Option key. Btw, I have a couple of external HDDs and an external DVD burner hooked up to my iMac and run all kinds of software. So far no problems with any.

If you want to call me names, tell me to shut up and f off...you will be ignored. I WILL NOT BE BULLIED!!

Lion installed great on our home iMac and wife's MBA. I had trouble with my 2010 MBP where it couldn't create the recovery disk. I pulled my hair out (figuratively) trying to figure out why. I did a fresh time machine backup and was prepared to do a clean install off a DVD I burned. Finally I decided to give it one last go and it worked, but very slowly. I think the issue revolved a backup drive I had that wouldn't mount or unmount. It was screwed up. My guess is that the Lion installer was trying unmount that disk or check something and just hung the install long enough to report an error.

Suffice to say, I'm now a happy Lion user and even got used to the inverted scrolling by lunch time. Hurrah!

There was a semi-supported Apple fix under Snow Leopard that installed some code on my iMac that would allow iPads to print to a shared printer on my Airport (an older HP that doesn't support AirPrint).

Is there an equivalent fix for Lion or am i SOL.... Sol?

"Swift generally gets you to the right way much quicker." - auxio -

"The perfect [birth]day -- A little playtime, a good poop, and a long nap." - Tomato Greeting Cards -

I work with 3 Desktops on 3 monitors (so 9 "spaces") all together - MIssion control seems to be okay for me so far.

I did have trouble on two systems MacBook Pro 2011 and Mac Mini Core2Duo - download took about 45 minutes - copied the install file off the first machine to a usb stick and network drive before continuing. On both systems after install which took maybe an hour - my user account on the MacBook and all but one (the alphabetically highest non-admin account) on the Mini seemed to have gone missing - had to boot to recovery - Command-R and resetpassword on the root account in order to login and then recreate the user accounts with the same info and relink to the existing folders.

My LaCie Network Space 2 seems to need an update for the user shares and TimeMachine to those shares to work.

For Adobe clean install there are some steps such as manually installing Java that need to be done first.

iMac and MacBook Pro Core2Duo are next on the list. might need to update a couple things on them first such as Parallels 4.0 on the one.

1) This is 100% Adobe's fault and not Apple's
2) Without telling us which of the many hundreds of Adobe suites it is, no one can suggest solutions for you.
3) The biggest change vis a vis Adobe for Lion is that all the crappy Java stuff and Flash stuff they use will be screwed up.

Try updating the Java (it's not automatically updated anymore), and it will likely work again as long as it's not CS4 or before.

Since I've installed Lion I've been checking for any problems with the software I use. First time I opened Cyberduck I needed a Java update. It was about a 85mb download. No big deal. After the install, Cyberduck didn't quack up.

If you want to call me names, tell me to shut up and f off...you will be ignored. I WILL NOT BE BULLIED!!

[QUOTE=Walter777;1905714]It took 4.5 hours to install Lion on my iMac (late 2010), starting at 8:45 in the morning yesterday. The download was slow; after the download it started to install the program, but when it reached "9 minutes" remaining, it stayed on that message for at least 1.5 hours until I turned the machine off. I then restarted the machine. At startup it seemed to run okay at first. After an hour it froze and I had to restart it. I had to restart it so far 5 times in one day because it freezes. This machine is a quad4 (i5) with 16 G of memory. I have shut down most of my programs this afternoon and so far so good. I think maybe, just maybe my Fusion program may be at fault, but that is just a wild guess. I now have Fusion powered off.

My iMac just froze again (6th time in 24 hours). This time I didn't have VM Fusion on, so the problem can't be Fusion. I was only running Final Cut Pro X.

Let's not start fanboying it up so quickly, cowboy.... Just making an observation. Did Apple walk into my house and pistol-whip my Adobe? No. Did Lion call my Acrobat up with a bomb threat? No. But it worked yesterday and now it does not. Relax.

to install a .0 OS. I have no desire to even try it. I am fine with SL.

No other possible explanation for it.

I have used every (non developer) release of OS X since the public beta of 10.0.0 - this is the first time I had a problem that was as apparently serious as the no user accounts on first reboot - that turned out to have a relatively simple fix.

So I am happily using the latest OS and all the new features - for about $7.50 per system in my house - so I must be the crazy one.

It may be the biggest single step in terms of third party apps that needed to be updated - and still a few (such as Unsanity Haxies) to wait for, but overall everything is working for me.

started off great even with my slow internet connection, then is stop downloading an error message, can't remember what it said, now app store show it in purchase with install button, so it know i don't have it, but click it no go, noting happens, tried logging out and in still no change, anyone know how clear the download mess so i can restart again.....?

I wonder if a few of these bloggers that are having problems are running on Hackintoshes? It seems to work flawlessly on all the Macs I've tried and I read this is true for most.

the report said some with issues are running boot camp in a partition or other perhaps not so common setups - that still should have been something that Apple tested since boot camp is their own software.

I installed on 2 Mac Mini's, 2 MBP and 3 iMacs with absolutely no issues. Each computer took about an hour start to finish. I downloaded onto an iMac, created a copy on an external hard drive and just copied the file to each computer. Wish everything was so easy.

Now just enjoying most of the new features and trying to learn those I do not know.

I triggered the installer and laid down on the couch with my iPad. After about a half hour I looked up and saw my computer sitting at the desktop. So I walk over, yep it's running 10.7. If only everything were that simple.

It's obviously the software's fault. Can't possibly be the fault of the user.

Oh, really, it's the user's fault?

It installed fine on my MacBook Air, and then I ran the installation on my 24" iMac. Sure, reboot, installing... 'hey, your drive had problems! Reboot and run repair on it.' message. OK. Reboot - flashing apple, question mark, and (I think) folder icons, quickly cycling - no boot to be found. (it was late and I was tired...).

Great, I'm going to boot from my SL install disk and run Disk Utility... which reports 'you have disk problems and will need to reformat your drive'. Fantastic. So the boot loader really couldn't find a boot partition anymore, which presumably is was they cycling icons bit at boot was about.

I suppose I should have run Disk Utility ahead of time or something, but there was no indication of any issue until the install choked and would have bricked my machine if I hadn't had the SL install handy.

Obviously user error. (!?!?) Great thing they decided against install media too. If Apple was going to do mysterious crap to the hard drive, maybe the installer should have run a repair or at least validation first before toasting my SL partition. Just sayin'.

the report said some with issues are running boot camp in a partition or other perhaps not so common setups - that still should have been something that Apple tested since boot camp is their own software.

On my 24" iMac, the first install somehow completely hosed the boot partition. I never had boot camp or multiple partitions on that drive either. Grumble. (I stupidly didn't back up first - my kids use the machine - so I didn't lose anything meaningful, but not a very inspiring experience.) I needed a clean SL re-install from the DVD, apply updates to 10.6.8, then Lion download/install to work.

It worked on my MB Air, but I'm very tentative now about installing on my wife's 27" iMac or my Pro tower since a 1 in 2 success rate doesn't leave me full of confidence. \

Spaces is still there. It's now part of Mission Control and works quite well.

Spaces used to be able to give you bird eye view of spaces alone and on a large enough screen (30'' ACD each space is rendered larger than 13'' macbook pro screen) you could actually see the state of windows and what is going on in each space all at once without switching to it. As a matter of fact invoking expose while in space bird eye view would expose windows in ALL spaces. Very useful feature.

In Lion spaces is integrated into expose and previews are tiny. You have to switch to the space to see what's going on in there. Expose as a consequence has gotten worse too. You invoke expose to remove a cluster fuck of windows only to be show a bigger cluster fuck of windows but this time each window is even smaller. Completely pointless.

Apple has lost its mojo it seems and with this release they made so many design and UI usability offenses to raise some serious eye brows. I'm openly calling Lion Apple's Vista.

I installed LION yesterday on a quad core iMac, eight core Mac Pro and Last generation MacAIr
It was the easiest install ever. 10 -15 minutes for download per machine and 30 minutes for installation.
It recognized that I had bought it and did not charge me.
In all machines it did say that there is an error in downloading and asked me to retry. The download icon o the Dock did not reappear but it did download it and installed it without a glitch

I doubt that was enough test cases, go get yourself a macbook pro, macbook and a new macbook air and report to us

It certainly appears that the problems are fairly light for a release of this magnitude, but the popularity seems to be causing some delays. For more than an hour the download icon has been showing a "waiting" message.

Quote:

Originally Posted by AppleInsider

A handful of Mac users have reported problems upgrading their system to Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, with various error messages, problems and quirks stemming from the Mac App Store download.

Download took about 2 hours via my 4.2 Mb/s DSL connection. Copied and burnt the installer onto a DVD and then ran the installer on my machine. Took twice as long as promised, an hour instead of the 30 minutes it promised.

The took the DVD and installed on my wife's machine to avoid the second download. Worked like a charm, and I still have the DVD for whatever. (didn't have a 4 GB stick handy.)

Both machines are running just fine. Stripping out a few old PPC programs and drivers that no longer work and getting used to the reverse scrolling. Hence, no installation issues using two different methods, of course, my disks are not partitioned funny or defective.

The new install has rendered my Adobe Pro suite completely useless. I know this is referenced in another thread, but seriously folks. I can't open a PDF without the whole program hanging up and crashing, let alone any serious work.

I guess a graphics professional should maybe have checked software compatibility before upgrading? I guess this is where u revert to your back up from time machine.

I like having an actual install disc of some kind. Which is Why I will be doing this with a flash drive and or DVD.

I'm betting that the problems people are having are coming from the way the downloaded Lion installer makes an invisible partition on the user's hard drive to install from. That might work for most setups, but there's bound to be issues with that. Call me old school, but no me gusta.

"The new install has rendered my Adobe Pro suite completely useless. I know this is referenced in another thread, but seriously folks. I can't open a PDF without the whole program hanging up and crashing, let alone any serious work."

Hmmmm. Did you not think of doing any research about program compatibility with Lion BEFORE you decided to purchase, download, and install the software? This sounds to me like nothing more than USER ERROR. I am sorry your apps don't work correctly at present (though I believe Adobe has posted a temporary fix for this concerning installing Java files), but you could have avoided the whole mess simply by doing a little online research. Don't blame Apple. They didn't point a gun to your head and force you to do anything.

The new install has rendered my Adobe Pro suite completely useless. I know this is referenced in another thread, but seriously folks. I can't open a PDF without the whole program hanging up and crashing, let alone any serious work.

Sounds like your copy of acrobat pro is either not up to date or is a pirate copy. CS 5.5 working fine on Lion on my mac.

Download took about 2 hours via my 4.2 Mb/s DSL connection. Copied and burnt the installer onto a DVD and then ran the installer on my machine. Took twice as long as promised, an hour instead of the 30 minutes it promised.

The took the DVD and installed on my wife's machine to avoid the second download. Worked like a charm, and I still have the DVD for whatever. (didn't have a 4 GB stick handy.)

Both machines are running just fine. Stripping out a few old PPC programs and drivers that no longer work and getting used to the reverse scrolling. Hence, no installation issues using two different methods, of course, my disks are not partitioned funny or defective.

First off, OSX Lion installed perfectly fine and without incident on my wife's MacBook. My MacMini was nearly flawless, I did have to resign into my Apple ID but aside from that--I had no issues there.

However, my MacPro was another beast entirely. I use FileVault to secure my hard drives as I'm a business owner with very sensitive client data. I didn't think twice of having an issue with this, but I did. My user account on my MacPro was unable to be logged into. I could log into other user accounts without a problem but not the user account I mainly used. The user password and master paswords just simply refused to let me into the computer. Resetting passwords didn't work either.

I ended up restoring my system using Time Machine to the moment before I installed OSX Lion. I then decrypted my user folder & turned off all FileVault features. I then was able to reinstall OSX Lion and get into my user account without any problems.

The other problem, which I'm still looking into, is USB ports. I have two USB PCIX cards and they weren't working properly. Some ports worked & then suddenly stopped working. I also noticed that the native USB ports that came with the MacPro had issues. For example, I could have the keyboard plugged into the front USB port but the mouse wouldn't work properly if plugged into the keyboard. The mouse still had a light on it, but did not work.

It just seems that there's some weird issue with power and USB ports, mainly my aftermarket ones, but also somewhat the original ports. Again, I've only had OSX Lion installed on the MacPro for less than 2 hrs so I'm still trying it out.

I 2.16g 20" iMac. No issues. Then I tried to log into government (Air Force) site with my CAC. No go. quick search reveal that CAC are no longer supported out of the box. Snap!.

Another search and i found PKard. Paid my money, installed and now works with no issue. I did not wan't to spend the money but the site said OWA would work. Tried it and it worked. Great, now i can work from home.